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31Mar 2017

Canadian M&A Market Recap: March 2017

Posted By: Valitas Capital Partners

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Market Update

Two hundred and eighteen Canadian M&A transactions closed in March. Year to date, M&A closed deal count is 19.8% higher than the comparable period in 2016. The Canadian dollar depreciated relative to the U.S. dollar by 0.46 cents, ending the month at 75 cents. WTI Crude Oil prices fell by 6.7% in March, ending the month at US$51.07 per barrel.

Valitas Insights: Know Your Buyers Part I

Know your Buyers is a three-part series by Valitas Capital Partners for business owners. It is designed to help owners consider the types of buyers that are in the market, how those buyers perceive value, and the advantages and disadvantages associated with each.

In this instalment of the series, Valitas discusses financial buyers. In May, we will explore strategic buyers and, in June, Valitas will present different business scenarios and how the type of buyer impacts sales strategy and the outcome in each case.

Today our capital markets are characterized by the strong interest of financial buyers that want to invest in private companies. These financial buyers include private equity firms, hedge funds, venture capital firms, some business conglomerates, investment firms belonging to wealthy families, family offices, as well as some ultra-high net worth individuals.

For these acquirers, buying a robust, stand-alone company is motivated by the expectation that they can generate strong equity returns, creating added value by using debt and enhancing financial performance. This can entail improving an underperforming business, expanding it organically, or making a purchase of a platform company to initiate a broader program of add-on acquisitions in an industry where economies of scale are important.

In fact, add-on strategies are growing in popularity among financial buyers who are targeting smaller firms to mitigate high valuations associated with large acquisitions and increasing competition from strategic buyers.An add-on strategy enables financial buyers to tap the value creation potential typically reserved for strategic buyers.

Why does this matter to you?Financial buyers have become increasingly prominent in the M&A market, particularly in the U.S.. Currently there is approximately US$750 billion in private equity “dry powder” – that is uninvested equity capital looking for a home, much of it with a time limit to be invested after which it must be returned to the LP investors.When availability of debt is factored in as a funding source for this activity, this amount more than doubles to over US$1.5 trillion.

In Canada, we can expect more activity from private equity investors, particularly U.S. funds turning to less mature markets to gain an edge.It is estimated that buyout capital under management in the U.S. represents approximately 5% of GDP, while in Canada it’s only about 1%.There has also been a persistent 20% Canadian buyout discount versus the valuations paid on U.S. buyouts.While this discount has been eroding, we expect this gap to close more quickly as more U.S. private equity funds invest in Canada.

Value Perception

Financial buyers target returns over their planned holding period, and typically expect to realize two to five times their initial equity investment. Hence, the acquisition valuations they payvary significantly by industry, geography and size of transaction. Common characteristics include:

Financial buyers are generally fast-moving and sophisticated. This impacts the sales process and potential outcomes:

They know how to handle sensitive information;

They are skilled at operating within sale processes and are more likely to table an attractive price, followed by an aggressive “due-diligence grind,” reducing value;

They also often require unique structural features and strong contractual protection;

Valuations and execution risk are closely tied to credit markets, particularly in the US; and

They usually require that management stay in the business for more than a year and maintain meaningful equity exposure of at least 20% as the starting point.

The best business transition process is one that accesses the optimal buyer universe and carefully determines which potential acquirers are most likely to see value in your business, balanced against your non-monetary objectives.

High financial leverage. Using higher levels of debt to finance acquisitions increases returns on equity investments and increases risk profiles. The target company will be leveraged with proceeds used to pay for part (could be a substantial part) of the acquisition price – the current market level is 50-55% debt;

Usually make control investments. Minority investments are becoming more common and have significant negative controls;

Financial buyers are generally fast-moving and sophisticated. This impacts the sales process and potential outcomes:

They know how to handle sensitive information;

They are skilled at operating within sale processes and are more likely to table an attractive price, followed by an aggressive “due-diligence grind,” reducing value;

They also often require unique structural features and strong contractual protection;

Valuations and execution risk are closely tied to credit markets, particularly in the US; and

They usually require that management stay in the business for more than a year and maintain meaningful equity exposure of at least 20% as the starting point.

The best business transition process is one that accesses the optimal buyer universe and carefully determines which potential acquirers are most likely to see value in your business, balanced against your non-monetary objectives.

Valitas knows financial buyers. We communicate regularly with more than 400 firms around the world that are seeking investments in Canadian companies. As former private equity investors ourselves, we are adept at working with business owners in a way that effectively demonstrates the value story a financial buyer will pay for.